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Hodges enlisted in the Corps in 1978 and worked as a supply administrative clerk before she was commissioned.

According to the release, this is Hodges’ fourth time getting orders to Lejeune. She said she never thought she’d assume command of the base one day.

“My only aspiration when I first joined the Corps was to be the best Marine I could be for four years,” she said. “Even after I was commissioned, the thought of commanding Camp Lejeune, or any other installation, was something I thought could never happen to me.”

Hodges previously served as the chief of the Joint Training Division at the North Atlantic Treaty Organization Joint Headquarters North in Stavanger, Norway.

How your pay stacks up

Think the size of your military paycheck doesn’t match your expertise or responsibilities? Ever wonder what you could make in civilian life for what you’ve learned while in uniform?

Each year, Marine Corps Times publishes a special report called “How Your Pay Stacks Up” that aims to answer those questions by comparing the earnings of active-duty service members in various military skills and their private-sector counterparts with similar levels of experience.

The 2006 edition of this special section is slated to run in our May 9 issue, and we’re looking for volunteers. You must be on full-time active duty, either regular military or mobilized National Guardsman or reservist, to be considered.

If you’d like to take part, visit www.marinecorpstimes.com and fill out a brief questionnaire. If you are selected, a member of our staff will contact you for a more thorough interview that will cover the details of what you do, how much you earn, and how you feel about your job and military pay. You will also be asked to provide a high-quality, head-and-shoulders photograph of yourself. Digital images are preferred, but prints are acceptable.

Is the grass really greener on the outside? This is your chance to find out.

Barracks brings back bugle

Marines at the service’s oldest post have brought back a piece of the old Corps.

According to a Marine Corps news release, leathernecks at Marine Barracks Washington are using the valveless bugle.

Sgt. Clint Owens, a soprano bugler, played morning colors Jan. 19 with the horn, which the United States Marine Drum and Bugle Corps had not used since the 1950s.

According to Owens, the instrument’s sound is determined completely by lip movement and air speed.

“We’ve reinstated these straight bugles for the same reason we still fly the 1801 flag at evening parades,” said Chief Warrant Officer 4 Brian Dix, director of the Drum and Bugle Corps. “This is our heritage, and it represents where we have come from.”

Future vision?

Service members don’t have superpowers, but defense officials hope to give them supervision.

PixelOptics of Roanoke, Va., will receive $3.5 million from the Defense Department to develop “SuperVision,” a Jan. 17 report from Windsofchange.net said. The firm’s technology could improve the vision of service members beyond 20/20 via electro-active prescription lenses, the report said.

According to the report, the technology uses sensors and electro-active transparent material to alter the index of refraction of the lens dynamically, without any moving parts. This allows the wearer to instantly achieve optimal vision no matter where he looks.

The lenses could also significantly reduce momentary blurring caused by head tilt and movement, the report said.

Base access for salesmen

In February, the Pentagon is scheduled to release new rules governing insurance agents’ access to bases, Stars and Stripes reported.

Defense officials have already posted the names of more than 20 agents who have been banned from conducting business on military installations because of abusive practices, the report said.

In November, the Government Accountability Office reported that at least six insurance companies operating in 40 states have for years been targeting junior service members with confusing and questionable insurance policies, but little has been done to stop the practice.

Officials said they would not implement an outright ban on salesmen accessing bases.

“You don’t want to put [troops] at risk, but you don’t want to suppress the marketplace, either,” said John Molino, deputy assistant secretary of defense for military community and family policy. “You want them to be able to make objective and independent decisions.”

Molino said officials will monitor the changes to see if they address the problem and said the department is looking for more ways to work with state officials in identifying abuse.

Jackson was charged with one count each of premeditated murder, kidnapping, impersonating a Naval Criminal Investigative Service agent and obstruction of justice. If convicted at court-martial on all charges, Jackson could be sentenced to death.

According to official charge sheets, Jackson convinced Huff that he was an NCIS agent more than once between Dec. 30 and Jan. 2. During this period, he allegedly exercised that phony authority by conducting an interrogation, placing handcuffs on Huff and ordering him into a truck.

Court documents allege that after killing Huff on or about Jan. 2, Jackson burned and buried Huff’s body, threw his clothes into a trash container, threw his wallet and mobile telephone into a lake and threw the knife used to kill Huff off a bridge.

War protester sentenced to prison

A peace activist was sentenced Jan. 23 to six months in prison for splattering his own blood at a military recruiting station to protest the then-looming war in Iraq.

Daniel Burns was the first of four activists to be sentenced for splattering their blood onto windows, walls, pictures and an American flag at the Army and Marine Corps recruiting station near Ithaca, N.Y., on March 17, 2003.

The so-called St. Patrick’s Four were convicted of damaging government property and entering a military recruiting station for unlawful purposes.

Burns, 45, was fined $250 for contempt and ordered to share payment of $958 in restitution for cleaning up the damage at the recruiting station.

Philippine arrest warrants withdrawn

Arrest warrants against four Marines accused of raping a Filipino woman have been withdrawn because the men are in American custody under a bilateral accord, a Philippine judge said.

The U.S. Embassy rejected Manila’s request to take custody of the Marines in January, invoking a provision of the Visiting Forces Agreement giving the embassy the right to hold any American military personnel facing charges in the Philippines.

Judge Renato Dilag of the Regional Trial Court in Olongapo said the Marines being at the embassy equated to them being held by the Philippines.

Dilag also said he will set a hearing date for the four men once the U.S. Justice Department has ruled on Philippine officials’ petition to review the indictment.

Elements of the 31st Marine Expeditionary Unit’s Maritime Special Purpose Force and members of the III Marine Expeditionary Force’s Special Operations Training Group from Okinawa, Japan, landed at Andersen Air Force Base, Guam, on Jan. 23 to participate in the Training in an Urban Environment Exercise 06-1, a Marine Corps news release said.

According to the release, TRUEX offers the MEU a realistic urban setting not typically available.

The training was scheduled to end Feb. 13.

Pakistan

Marines help deliver earthquake supplies

Leathernecks with Landing Support Company, 3rd Transportation Support Battalion, 3rd Marine Logistics Group, based on Okinawa, Japan, have helped deliver more than 6.5 million pounds of supplies to Northern Pakistan since Nov. 16, a Jan. 24 Corps news release said.

According to the release, Pakistan’s Oct. 8 earthquake wiped out supply routes throughout the country, so the Army has used CH-47 Chinook cargo helicopters to drop supplies into mountainous or less-populated areas.

The Marine landing support specialists connect supply loads to the helicopters, according to Staff Sgt. Victor Robinson, the sling-load chief for the helicopter support team with Combined Medical Relief Team 3. Robinson said supply drops are important because helicopters cannot land in many places.

“We came here unsure of exactly what we were going to do,” said Lance Cpl. Jeffrey Radcliff, a landing support specialist with the company, “but we will leave knowing that we supplied millions of pounds of food to people in need.”

The Wadley Urban Close Air Support and Convoy Escort Exercise focused on urban close-air support and convoy escort, the release said.

According to Lt. Col. Michael Huff, the large force exercise coordinator for Marine Aircraft Group 31, Marine Wing Support Squadron 273 and MAG-31 worked together in combat-based scenarios in preparation for upcoming deployments.

The exercise included a convoy of MWSS-273 vehicles driving down country roads in simulated combat conditions while in constant contact with air support, the release said.